vendredi 15 juin 2007

jeudi 7 juin 2007

My new pictures :D (haters leave now)

<-------clubbing


<-----feedin' the swans








mercredi 6 juin 2007

Holocaust diary of young girl emerges after 60 yrs

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A Polish woman who for 60 years had been holding onto the diary of a young Jewish girl killed by the Nazis in 1943, presented the journal to Israel's Holocaust memorial on Monday.
"I have a feeling that I'm writing for the last time. There is a (round-up) in town. I'm not allowed to go out and I'm going crazy, imprisoned in my own house," 14-year-old Rutka Laskier wrote while living in a Jewish ghetto in Bedzin, Poland on February 20, 1943.
Laskier hid her diary under the floorboards of her house before her family was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp.
It was later found by Stanislawa Sapinska, a Bedzin native, who lived in the house before the German occupation and had befriended Laskier.
"She wanted the journal to survive, even if she didn't, so the world would see how the Jews suffered," said Sapinska, 82, at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem.
The two girls agreed that Laskier would hide the diary beneath a floorboard under the staircase of her house and following the war Sapinska would look after it, Sapinska said.
A Yad Vashem spokeswoman said they believe Laskier was killed immediately after arriving in Auschwitz in August, 1943.
ANNE FRANK
Throughout the 60-page manuscript, handwritten in Polish, Laskier talks about love, death and everyday life in the ghetto. She begins one paragraph recounting the "torment" and "hell" of anticipating her own death, but finishes it with an adolescent rant about a boy she loves.
Yad Vashem has collected hundreds of diaries and poems written by Jews during the Holocaust, but Laskier's diary stands out from the others, including the well-known Diary of Anne Frank, because of the story of its discovery, said Bella Gutterman, chief editor of Yad Vashem Publishing.
"The diary itself is wonderful, about personal life, loves and envies in the shadow of the Holocaust. But it was found by her friend and we only now read it 60 years later," Gutterman said.
Sapinska said she did not regret keeping the diary hidden.
"(I kept it to myself) because it was a precious souvenir that I read many times," she said.
Two years ago Sapinska told her nephew about the book and he convinced her to make it public.
"He said I can't hold on to it. It's history. It's the history of a nation," Sapinska said.
The original Polish manuscript was published earlier this year and has now been translated into English and Hebrew.
The Holocaust memorial also located Laskier's step-sister who was born in
Israel after World War Two.

samedi 2 juin 2007

Things I'D like to Do

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-Learn Spanish
-Buy a hybrid car
-Go to NYC
-Buy more clothes
-Learn PHP
-Get a masters degree
-Learn polish cooking
-Back to Europe before I turn 30
-Dance like no ones watching
-Visit all 50 States

mardi 29 mai 2007

Hilla & Me :)

I missssssssss youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu :(


vendredi 25 mai 2007

Evil kebab

I am never eating one again :(

Cherelle Cherie :D

With Cherelle at the british-american restaurant